Publication | Closed Access
Images of Law in Everyday Life: The Lessons of School, Entertainment, and Spectator Sports
109
Citations
44
References
1987
Year
Legal GeographyCriminal CodeEuropean LawLawAmerican LifeCriminal LawLegal StudyBounded SetTechnology LawSocial Imagination.Popular CultureEveryday LifeLegal TheoryLegal EthicsTheatreSpectator SportsSport BusinessInternational LawLegal PhilosophyLegal PracticeTelevisionComparative LawInternational Legal StudiesLegal StyleLegal HistorySociology Of LawArts
Some of us see law as largely marginal to American life (see, e.g., Macaulay, 1984), but other colleagues assert that law constitutes society. One position does not contradict the other because we are talking about different things. Cases, statutes, and enforcement agencies very seldom directly influence everyday life. At the same time, law is an important part of culture. Despite many debates (see, e.g., Hall, 1977; Harris, 1980; Ortner, 1984), legal culture affects everyday life in important ways. At the very least, it provides a vocabulary with which we rationalize our actions to others and ourselves. As Geertz (1983: 173, 232) insists, “law is not a bounded set of norms …, but part of a distinctive manner of imagining the real.” Law is “meaning … not machinery.” It is “a species of social imagination.” It “is constructive of social realities rather than merely reflective of them.”
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